She crossed an ocean to escape a country that had never wanted her alive. What is the true price of being promised, at last, a home? Della Mae Whitfield came to Peoples Temple the way thousands of Black Americans did in the 1970s - drawn by a white preacher who put Black faces in the front pews, fed the hungry, housed the old, and called integration a sacrament. She gave the movement her savings, her name, her children, and her certainty about what was real, believing each surrender bought her closer to a promised land in the Guyanese jungle. By the time she understood that the paradise was a cage and the family a hostage, the loudspeakers never went silent and the rehearsals for death had a name. What They Called Freedom follows one woman from the welcome that was genuine to the morning that took nearly everyone she loved - and asks what survives of a self that was taught surrender was liberation. It is the story the country flattened into a cruel punchline, restored to the people who actually died: overwhelmingly Black, overwhelmingly women and children, betrayed first by a nation and then by the man who promised to save them from it.